if this weighs so much could we just run a couple stainless fishing leaders from the lnb yoke to the edge of the dish and attach with a couple screws
if this weighs so much could we just run a couple stainless fishing leaders from the lnb yoke to the edge of the dish and attach with a couple screws
if this weighs so much could we just run a couple stainless fishing leaders from the lnb yoke to the edge of the dish and attach with a couple screws
Still flimsy - wires are bad for holding LNBF on place - it's hold only one direction : down, but allow to move up/left/right; better use struts.
Still flimsy - wires are bad for holding LNBF on place - it's hold only one direction : down, but allow to move up/left/right; better use struts.
That may be the case if the lnbf is in the right place already, but I guarantee that isn't the case with my lnbf, since I had to stress it with probably 10 lbs of tension to pull the lnbf up into position. So it isn't moving in ANY direction, despite the apparent slack look of the wires. The wire is pretty heavy duty wire, and even 10 lbs tension didn't straighten out the kinks.
But even if you didn't have the lnbf in the wrong position, if the reason for the wires is to compensate for the extra weight, then all the force is down anyway, so I don't see a problem with using wires. Bottom line, it's a cheap solution, and struts might be better, but it can't be worse than not having them.
B.J.
My brother ran into a case with a brand new dish where the LNBF support arm was not correctly formed (the bend where the arm passes under the lower perimeter of the dish was not fully complete). No wire or struts would have corrected this. He physically had to finish the bend that was not done fully at the factory.
This was not a difficult task, but if it is your first NEW dish, how would you know that it was wrong without going through a lot of frustration. This was on a Winegard DS-2076 dish. The LNBF support arm on that dish cleared the bottom perimeter of the reflector plate by 2-3 inches. On my dish, it barely cleared it by 3/8". We soon picked up on this difference and corrected his dish by bending the arm properly (completely). That dish is still in use somewhere and doing fine now.
A person has to watch out for these quirks.
RADAR
I found out that my support arm was bent before I ever put it up, via aiming at the sun with mirrors, however I was reluctant to bend a brand new dish, and it seemed to work OK even though in the wrong place. But I finally got fed up, and put it in the right place, and I did improve the reception a bit.
Re the previous post about trying guy wires to support a dish on a pole, yeah, I had a friend who put a 10' dish on a PVC pole, and he tried to secure that with steel cables, and it just pulled the anchors right out of the ground. Didn't come close to working.
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I only have two snares that I cannot seem to fix. RTN on 83 and the interference from Video-1 and Estrela do Sul @ 63.0W being very weak (69% Q).
Everything else is coming in with quality ...
I haven't had any problems with RTN. It's been solid, as has Video-1/LEO. My theory is that blind scan receiver have a problem with that, while non-blind scan receivers can handle the nearby channels, but that's just a guess.
The Estrela do Sul thing really annoys me. For years, I've been tuning that sat in, getting the DCII channels there, but since i have a 4200 that requires about 50 some keystrokes to tune the DCII channels, I seldom went there. THEN, the DCII channels changed to DVB, so it was convenient to tune them in.... but 3 pine trees grew up, and blocked me. I can't get a hint of a signal off that sat anymore. Good news is that my wife want's to install a barn, that will require those 3 pine trees to GO AWAY. So I may get that sat back if we decide to go through with the barn.
Actually, there were 5 pine trees, and I already took down 2 of them, in order to get AMC6 back since I had lost NASA and the MSNBC channels, but there are still about 3 of them blocking T14 (which is what the North American sat users calls Estrela do Sul).
I got my Invacom QWPH-031 today. Wow this thing weighs 5 times as much as my single linear only. My cheapo d-wave dish is able to hold it w/out any extra support...thank goodness.
I did get it from an ebay seller. I need to go back and read the "how to tell if you have a clone" but so far it's working very nice.
Skew isn't dead center at zero at my straight south bird but a 3 degree variance seems ok.
sw21 between the motor and lnb..right?
Assuming that we're talking QPH-031 rather than QWPH-031...LOL! Yeah, it is heavy, but remeber there are four LNBFs inside!
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